From Publishers Weekly
English poet and novelist Nye's slim fiction is so charmingly written, one hardly minds that in the end the plot boils down to a literary dirty joke. Seven years after William Shakespeare's death, in an anachronistically feminist move for 1622, Susanna Shakespeare gives her widowed mother a vellum blank book, and in it Anne decides to write "My story. His story. Our story. The story of the poet, the wife, the best bed, and the bed called second-best." In doing so she solves several literary mysteries: what was the second-best bed, mentioned in Shakespeare's will? and who was the Dark Lady of the Sonnets? The first half of the book seems much ado about nothing as Anne rambles on about the difficulties of being married to a poet. As she writes, she sets the scene for her dramatic trip to visit William on his 30th birthday in London, where he has been living while she struggles to raise their children in Stratford. Anne loves her misguided romantic of a husband, although she can't understand what motivates him, commenting, "I have not read his works. I read my Bible." When Nye, author of the Hawthorndon Prize- and the Guardian Fiction Prize-winning Falstaff, finally reveals the dramatic secret of the bedDnamely who gave it to William, why and what actions have taken place in itDthe marital romp that ensues illustrates Nye's amusing theory that Shakespeare tested the plots of his plays in flagrante delicto. Nye's light tone and whimsical touches (Anne shares a couple of truly disgusting-sounding 16th-century recipes) buoy up this tartly ribald romantic comedy, a graceful literary fantasia. (Oct.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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From Booklist
The Late Mr. Shakespeare (1999), which told Shakespeare's life from the vantage of a former boy actor in the bard's troupe, was brilliant, a tour de force. Part Laurence Sterne, part Tom Stoppard, packed with jokes, puns, eccentric stories, and iconoclastic revelations, the novel delighted on every page.
Mrs. Shakespeare , Nye's second act, so to speak, is amusing but less awe inspiring. It, too, recalls Tom Stoppard--the toned-down Stoppard responsible for
Shakespeare in Love . In some ways, in fact,
Mrs. Shakespeare is
Shakespeare in Love as told by the slightly baffled, forgotten wife. For this time it is through the eyes of Anne Hathaway that we see the slow-paced, country home Shakespeare left behind in Stratford, the wild new world he joined when he went to London to find his fortune, and many aspects of his domestic life--his early marriage, his drunken father, his children. As for laughs, Anne's revelations that the greatest poet of the English language had feet of clay lead to most of the biggest.
Jack HelbigCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.